Members of with 2nd Battalion, 11th Marines, patrol a poppy field in Habib Abad, Helmand province, Afghanistan, on April 4. Marines are working to stem the flow of drugs out of the region by hitting stashes that already have been harvested. (Sgt. Andrea M. Olguin / Marine Corps)

We trust you’ve been reading — and enjoying — senior staff writer Dan Lamothe’s numerous dispatches from Afghanistan, where he and photographer James Lee are embedded presently with members of 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, out of Camp Lejeune, N.C. Thanks so much for your continued interest in their work.

Before shipping out last week to 1/8’s area of operations in Kajaki, Lamothe spent several days at Camp Leatherneck, the Corps’ nerve center in southwestern Afghanistan. There, he met with Maj. Gen. David Berger, the head of 1st Marine Division (Forward), who provided a sitrep on Marines’ activities throughout Helmand province. A principal focus at the moment, Berger explained, is preventing old stocks of poppy from leaving the country. Poppy, of course, is used to make heroin and other narcotics, and its trade has long lined Taliban pockets.

As Lamothe reports:

Marine battalions in central Helmand have actively fought to stifle mobile smuggling, Berger said. In Marjah district, 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines, out of Camp Lejeune, N.C., has had a standing request for helicopters and a heliborne raid force for more than a month.

“They have a very good system, intelligencewise, and they’ll have a very good idea of where one could happen,” Berger said. “So, you’ll have people geared up and ready to go. When the mobile bazaar happens, they’ll either hit the bazaar, or not hit the bazaar and be watching.”

Earlier this month, Marines used drones to track vehicles after they left a mobile bazaar, Berger said. The smugglers eventually parked, hid their vehicles and walked nearly a mile away from them to get some sleep. A raid force with Lejeune’s 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines, reached the vehicles at first light and found about 3,000 pounds of cocaine, opium and heroin.

Marines are not involved in any poppy eradication, for fear that doing so would alienate the local population, Berger said. The crops are fair game only after they’ve left the farmers’ hands.

3 Comments

So now Marines are DEA agents? That’s funny, seems to me the reason there over there is to protect the opium crop so the USA pharmacutical companies can make there billions off of all the addicted Americans on Percocet and Vicoden. It’s about time they hoist up the anchor in the shithole, what a waste of lives and money!!!!

Thank you Marines, Soilders, writers, photographers and everyone else doing their best to make a difference and being so courageous in your efforts as well as keeping us informed!! Oh and Brian your pills must be getting low…

One detail on the drugs found: cocaine comes from the coca plant in south America and not from opium.

And the farmers have been asking for help with the prices of cotton, which they still cultivate in central Helmand, since 1997 as one of the prerequisites for getting out of opium poppy which they consider an evil crop but with a reliable market and a credit system, which we have been unable to equal in the past 10 years. Why not? The Bost cotton gin in Helmand still functions but has gotten no support since our arrival in 02. see my website for details for more details: scottshelmandvalleyarchives.org